Neglected books page

rich richard.romeo at gmail.com
Wed Jun 10 15:01:53 UTC 2020


one reason I would argue for this is the lack of happy finds browsing in
physical bookstores anymore (or alot less of it). finding things online in
so many platforms is geared towards knowing what you're looking for or god
forbid having an algorithm suggest things. id rather follow a well-informed
librarian than a crowd sourced machine. its a bit of a sore spot for me
since I'm a librarian of sorts by trade.

robert aickman, fernando del paso, muriel spark, leon forrest are writers I
discovered haphazardly. not on amazon

rich

On Wed, Jun 10, 2020 at 6:04 AM Cometman via Pynchon-l <pynchon-l at waste.org>
wrote:

> The Neglected Books Page
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> The Neglected Books Page
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> www.NeglectedBooks.com: Where forgotten books are remembered
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> "But every time I go into the university library and wander down the
> aisles of English and American literature, I have to wonder: Does the world
> really need yet another bit of writing about Edith Wharton or D. H.
> Lawrence or F. Scott Fitzgerald? These writers are like those hotels with
> 10,000 reviews on Tripadvisor. Checking today, the current count
> on Goodreads for The Age of Innocence stands at 134,391 ratings and 6,378
> reviews. Stop. Just stop. Will yet one more opinion make any difference?
> I don’t pretend that every book I write about on this site is a
> masterpiece. I hope no one feels obligated to read anything I’ve featured
> here. But I do try to shine a little light on the things that few or none
> have read and written about for years, often decades. That, in its own
> humble way, seems to be adding something original to the world.
>
> I want to encourage you to do the same. Go off-piste, as they say in
> skiing. Read and write about something from 1920 that no one else will.
> Maybe it’ll just be ho-hum, no life-changer, maybe too flawed to recommend
> to anyone else. Some books are neglected for good reasons, and you will do
> the reading public the service of warning them off. Maybe it’ll surprise
> you: who knew Elisabeth Sanxay Holding wrote straight fiction before she
> got into writing mysteries? Tell the English reading public about Polish
> novelist Zofja Nakowska’s first major novel, Kobiety (Women). Do you agree
> with Orlo Williams that Storm Jameson’s first novel, The Happy Highways, is
> just full of “Talk, talk, talk”? Is Stephen Hudson the English Marcel
> Proust? Chances are good that you’ll be the first, or at least one of the
> very few, to have traveled down that piste in many, many seasons. Every
> rediscovered masterpiece has to have its first rediscovery.
>
> So here are a selection of long-forgotten titles...."
> --
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